System and method for determining effective policy profiles in a client-server architecture

ABSTRACT

A system and method for determining effective policy profiles, is presented herein. The system includes one or more client devices configured to initiate a request for at least one effective policy profile, a server mechanism communicatively coupled to the one or more client devices and configured to receive the request for the at least one effective policy profile and determine the at least effective policy profiles for each of the requesting one or more client devices, and a policy data storage component communicatively coupled to the server mechanism and configured to store a plurality of policy profiles. The plurality of plurality of policy profiles includes an association between each of the one or more client devices and one or more of the plurality of policy profiles.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/108,766, entitled “System and Method for Determining Effective Policy Profiles in a Client-Server Architecture,” filed Apr. 19, 2005, and which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/662,792, entitled “System and Method for Determining Effective Policy Profiles in a Client-Server Architecture,” filed Mar. 18, 2005, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally relates to networks and systems and methods for providing policy profile information.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Service-based functionality is commonly employed in networked environments utilizing client-server architectures. Such functionality enables users to store various subsets of information at different locations, rather than storing all the information on a single computer. In this manner, client devices that are connected to the network are capable of accessing the information as needed.

To this end, “policy profiles” are often implemented to manage the services that a client device may wish to access. Policy profiles may define settings, configurations, and/or attributes related to a user, workstation, group of workstations, or other client device that may be connected to the network.

Generally, determining which policy profiles are required or effective for a given client device has been the responsibility of the client device itself. In traditional systems, a client device may query a server which maintains policy profile information for a plurality of client devices. The policy information may be stored within different components of the server. Thus, a client device desiring to obtain its policy information would query each component to determine whether the component contains policy profiles relevant to the device. The client device would then assemble the policy information obtained from each component, and subsequently perform a series of computations to determine which policy profiles are effective for its configuration.

A problem associated with this traditional approach is that the effective policy profile computations are often repeated. That is, many client devices perform the same set of computations to determine their effective policy profiles. In addition, multiple processes within a single client device may need to perform the same computations, adding to the redundancies and ultimately wasting processing time and resources. Furthermore, should any problems associated with the policy profile information and/or computations arise, such problems would have to be corrected at each individual client device.

These and other drawbacks exist.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A system and method for determining effective policy profiles, is presented herein. The system includes one or more client devices configured to initiate a request for one or more policy profiles, a server mechanism communicatively coupled to the one or more client devices and configured to receive the request for one or more policy profiles and determine the one or more policy profiles for each of the requesting one or more client devices, and a policy data storage component communicatively coupled to the server mechanism and configured to store a plurality of policy profiles. The plurality of policy profiles includes an association between each of the one or more client devices and one or more of the plurality of policy profiles.

According to some embodiments of the invention, the server mechanism may receive a request from a client device to provide at least one effective policy, determine whether the at least one effective policy profile is stored in a local cache, and if the at least one effective policy profile is stored in the local cache, the server mechanism may return the at least one effective policy profile to the client devices. If the at least one effective policy profile is not stored in the local cache, the server may access the policy data storage component to retrieve at least one policy profile associated with the client device, determine whether the at least one policy profile is effective for the client device, and return at least one effective policy profile to the client device.

The server mechanism may include a policy lookup service configured to retrieve at least one policy profile associated with a client device and determine whether the at least one policy profile describes an effective policy for the client device. The server mechanism may also include a local cache configured to maintain a list of one or more recently requested policy profiles.

The one or more client devices may each include a policy manager configured to interface with the server mechanism to obtain one or more effective policy profiles by initiating remote procedure calls to the server mechanism. Each client device may also include a local data storage mechanism configured to store at least one policy profile that is currently effective on the client device.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 illustrates a client-server network system, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 2 illustrates a policy manager associated with a client device, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 3 illustrates a policy lookup service associated with a server, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 4 illustrates a process associated with a server, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 5 illustrates a plurality of policy profile types, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 6 illustrates an associative hierarchy of client devices, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention; and

FIG. 7 illustrates a process associated with a client device, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

According to various embodiments of the invention, a system and method are provided for determining effective policy profiles for a device in a client/server network architecture. A policy profile may be effective if it is required or germane to the functionality of a particular client device and, depending on the device applications or intended operations, a client device may have one or more effective policy profiles.

To improve the processing of effective policy profiles for one or more client devices, embodiments of the present invention contemplate shifting the effective policy profile determination functionality to the server. That is, the server may be configured to perform the effective policy computations for one or more client devices.

With this server configuration, a client device desiring to update its effective policy profile may send a request to the server to determine which profiles are effective for its intended applications or operations. The client device may present identification information to the server to enable the server to consult a repository of policy profile information (i.e., a policy data store) and determine the effective policy profiles for the client device. As such, rather than interfacing directly to the data store itself, the client device is able to send queries to the server to retrieve the policy information, thereby avoiding the need for the client device to know, a priori, what formats the policy profile information is stored in.

In accordance with various embodiments of the present invention, system 100 is presented in FIG. 1. System 100 represents one or more client devices 110 a-110 n communicatively coupled to a server 120 via a client-server network infrastructure.

Client device 110 n may comprise any networked device such as, for example, a desktop or laptop computer, a PDA, a Blackberry, a wireless or cellular phone, and/or any other electronic device capable of accessing a network. Client device 110 n may be configured to maintain a local data store 112 n where its effective policy profile information may be stored. Local data store 112 n may be aware of effective polices even if client device 110 n is disconnected from the network. As such, local data store 112 n may enforce the effective policies stored therein in the event effective policy profiles may not be obtained from server 120.

As in most networking environments, the policy profile information stored in local data store 112 n of client device 110 n may need to be periodically updated. For example, an administrator may require that the policy profiles be updated at pre-scheduled times. As another example, the local data store 112 n may become corrupt, requiring its contents to be restored. For at least these reasons, client device 110 n may be configured with policy manager 114 n. Policy manager 114 n may be configured to communicate with server 120 to update the effective policy profile information stored in local data store 112 n. In one embodiment, policy manager 114 n may send requests to server 120 to retrieve effective policy profile information as well as manage the policy profiles received from server 120.

As depicted in FIG. 1, server 120 may include a policy lookup service 122 as well as local cache 124. Policy lookup service 122 may be configured to receive requests from client device 110 n to retrieve information relative to device's 110 n effective policy profiles. According to some embodiments of the invention, policy lookup service 122 may initially consult local cache 124 to determine whether this information is locally stored. In turn, local cache 124 may be configured to store policy profile information for the most recently requested policy profiles. Such information may be removed by an administrator after a predetermined time interval has elapsed.

In other embodiments, a timer may be included for each entry captured by local cache 124. Policy lookup service 122 may then consult the timer for each requested cache entry to determine whether the entry is older than a predetermined time interval. Policy lookup service 122 may also be configured to communicate with a policy data store 130, which will be described in greater detail below, to retrieve policy profile information that is not included or is not up to date in local cache 124, or may alternatively consult only policy data store 130.

As indicated in FIG. 1, server 120 may also be communicatively coupled to, or integrated with, policy data store 130. As noted above, policy data store 130 represents a repository of policy profile information. As such, policy data store 130 may include settings, configurations, and/or attributes related to a user, workstation, group of workstations, or other networked client devices.

Returning to client device 110 n, policy manager 114 n may be responsible for sending requests to server 120 to retrieve effective policy profile information as well as managing the policy profiles received from server 120. As such, policy manager 114 n may include one or more modules implementing various embodiments of the present invention to achieve the transmission of requests and the management of the received policy profile information, as depicted in FIG. 2. In one embodiment, policy manager 114 n may include communications module 210 that is configured to initiate communications with server 120. For example, communications module 210 may issue a remote procedure call to server 120 requesting that server 210 determine which policy profiles are potentially effective for client device 110 n. In some embodiments of the invention, communications module 210 may initiate subsequent procedure calls to request complete effective policy data. Communications between client device 110 n and server 120 may use one or more communications protocol standards such as, for example, Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), Hyper Text Transport Protocol (HTTP), XMLRPC, and/or other communications protocols.

Policy manager 114 n may also include an effective policy analysis module 220. As will be described in further detail below, most computations required to determine a client device's effective policy profiles may be performed at server 120. However, in the event that policy profile information may not be completely computed by server 120, policy analysis module 220 may complete the remaining computations. Effective policy analysis module 220 may retrieve a list of potentially effective policy profiles from server 120. Policy analysis module 220 may analyze each listed item of policy profile information to determine whether the item's effectiveness was fully computed by server 120. If not, policy analysis module 220 may complete the required computations.

As noted above, policy manager 114 n may be configured to interface with the policy lookup service 122 of server 120 to obtain policy profile information. As illustrated in FIG. 3, policy lookup service 122 may include a client interface management module 310, a data lookup module 320, and/or an effective policy computation module 330, consistent with various embodiments of the present invention. Client interface management module 310 may be configured to receive and process incoming requests from policy manager 114 n of client device 110 n to retrieve effective policy profile information. Data lookup module 320 may be configured to search and retrieve policy profile information from local cache 122 and/or policy data store 130. Effective policy computation module 330 may be configured to determine one or more policy profiles that may qualify as effective policies for a requesting client device 110 n.

As discussed above, embodiments of the present invention contemplate shifting the effective policy profile determination functionality to the server 120. Consistent with these embodiments, policy lookup service 122 associated with server 120 may be implemented by process 400, as depicted in FIG. 4, to obtain and provide the policy profile information requested by policy manager 114 n of client device 110 n.

Along these lines, at operation 402 of process 400, policy lookup service 122 may receive a request from policy manager 114 n of client device 110 n to determine which policy profiles may be effective for requesting client device 110 n. As indicated above, each client device 110 n may be associated with one or more policy profiles. According to some embodiments of the invention, a client device 110 n may be a part of a group or container and each client device 110 n within the group or container may be associated with one or more policy profiles. Groups may represent client devices sharing a common attribute, or may be randomly assigned by an administrator. Containers may be used to hold one or more types of other objects. For example, a container may include one or more client devices, groups of client devices, other containers.

The received request may include indicia providing the identity of the requesting client device 110 n. Indicia may include, for example, a name associated with the device, a group name associated with a group that client device 110 n belongs to, etc.

Because, as noted above, policy lookup service 122 is associated with server 120 that may also maintain a local cache 124 of recently requested policy profile information, local cache 124 may first be consulted to determine if valid policy profile information is stored in local cache 124, as indicated by operation 404. Policy profile information may be stored as entries in local cache 124 if, for example, the requesting client devices 110 a-110 i sent previous requests within a specified amount of time for policy profile information and client device 110 n, within the same group or container as client devices 110 a-110 i, is currently requesting the same or similar policy profile information.

As also noted above, a timer or timeout value may be associated with each cache policy profile information entry to determine whether the entry is older than a predetermined time interval. In this manner, if the policy profile information entry stored in local cache 124 is not older than the predetermined time interval defined by the timer or timeout value, the entry may be deemed as valid policy profile information so that the information may be retrieved from local cache 124 and the information may be returned to client device 110 n, as depicted by operation 406.

In the event that the policy profile information entry stored in local cache 124 is older than the predetermined time interval, policy lookup service 122 may default to reading the appropriate policy profile information from policy data store 130, as indicated by operation 408. As discussed above, policy data store may maintain a repository of policy profile information, such as, settings, configurations, and/or attributes related to client devices 110 a-110 n.

As illustrated at operation 410, for each policy profile associated with requesting client device 110 n, policy lookup service 122 may determine a policy type. As depicted in FIG. 5, policy types may include, for example, singular policies, plural policies, cumulative policies, and/or other policy types which may be defined. Singular policies may include those policies wherein only one policy may be effective on a client device 110 n at any given time. As such, the most effective instance of a singular policy may be applied to client device 110 n.

Plural policies are those policies for which all instances found to be effective may be applied to client device 110 n. Cumulative policies are those policies for which all instances of the policy found by the effective policy computations may be applied to client device 110 n. However, the cumulative policies may be applied in reverse order of effectiveness, or closeness, allowing the most effective, or closest policy to be the last policy applied.

Referring back to process 400 of policy lookup service 122, at operation 412, policy lookup service 122 may also determine whether any system requirements are associated with each policy profile and whether these system requirements may be validated for the requesting client device 110 n. When policy definitions are created by an administrator, the definition may include one or more system requirements that are needed for a client device 110 n implementing the requested policy profile. System requirements may include, for example, information related to the CPU characteristics, amount of memory, type and/or size of a disk drive, whether any files should exist on the implementing device, and/or other requirements.

Policy lookup service 122 may also determine whether requesting client device 110 n meets the system requirements associated with a policy profile. However, server 120 may not have all information needed to fully evaluate each system requirement. For example, server 120 may not know whether a requesting client device 110 n has a necessary file stored on it. In accordance with some embodiments of the invention, policy lookup service 122 may be configured to remove policy profiles from a list of potential effective policy profiles that have failed to meet at least one system requirement, as depicted by operation 414. In other embodiments of the invention, policy lookup service 122 may issue a request to the client to determine whether a system requirement that the policy lookup service is unable to validate can be met by the client.

Once policy lookup service 122 has created a list of potentially effective policy profiles for requesting client device 110 n, a hierarchy in which the policy profiles should be applied may be determined by policy lookup service 122, as depicted by operation 416. Policy profiles may be implemented based on their hierarchal closeness to requesting client device 110 n.

For example, FIG. 6 depicts an exemplary hierarchy which may be employed by policy lookup service 122 in determining which policy profiles should be implemented. As depicted at 602, policy profiles that are directly associated with requesting client device 110 n may be implemented first. As illustrated at 604, policy profiles associated with a group to which the requesting client device 110 n belongs may be the next choice. Policy profiles associated with a container which contains the requesting client device 110 n may then be implemented, as depicted at 606. A container may contain other containers, which may contain groups, which may contain client devices. As such, this hierarchy is followed to the root of the policy data store 130, as depicted at 608-610. With this said, it will be appreciated that other customized hierarchies may be employed by policy lookup service 122.

Referring back to process 400, policy lookup service 122 may return a list of hierarchically ordered and potentially effective policy profiles to requesting client device 110 n, as depicted at 418. If one or more singular policy profiles are located while processing the list of potentially effective policy profiles, the singular policy having the closest hierarchical distance to the requesting device is returned. For cumulative policy profiles, the singular cumulative policy and its cumulative prerequisites may be provided as effective policy profiles. For plural policy profiles, all effective policy profiles may be provided. The list of potentially effective policy profiles may include, for example, the name of the policy profile, the policy profile type, any remaining system requirements that have not been validated, the current version number of the policy profile, and/or other information.

As discussed above, policy lookup service 122 of server 120 operates to provide effective policy profiles in response to requests from policy manager 114 n of client device 110 n. As such, in accordance with various embodiments of the present invention, FIG. 7 illustrates process 700 that may be executed by client device 110 n in initiating such requests and managing the policy profile information. As depicted at operation 702, a request may be sent by policy manager 114 n of client device 110 n to server 120 requesting a list of potentially effective policy profiles that may be implemented by requesting client device 110 n. After the request is processed by policy lookup service 122 of server 120, policy lookup service 122 returns the results to requesting client device 110 n, as depicted by operation 704. Results may include one or more potentially effective policy profiles.

As described above, it is possible that server 120 may be unable to validate every system requirement associated with a policy profile. Thus, as illustrated at operation 706, requesting client device 110 n may determine whether it should validate any system requirements. If there are remaining system requirements to be validated, the validation may be performed and any policy profiles for which requesting client device 110 n does not meet the system requirements may be removed from the list, as depicted by operation 708.

At operation 710, requesting client device 110 n may compare the version number of each policy profile in the returned list of effective policy profiles with the policy profiles stored in the local data store 112 n of client device 110 n. If the policy profile in the returned list is not a newer version that the locally-stored version, local data store 112 n may be deemed as current and processing may cease. However, as indicated by operation 712, if the returned list of policy profiles is a newer version than the locally-stored policy profile, a subsequent procedure call may be made to server 120 to provide updated complete policy profile information to client device 110 n.

Other embodiments, uses, and advantages of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. This specification should be considered exemplary only, and the scope of the invention is accordingly intended to be limited only by the following claims. 

1-16. (canceled)
 17. A computer-implemented method of providing policy profiles to client devices based on hierarchical levels, the method being implemented by a computer system that comprises one or more physical processors executing one or more computer program instructions which, when executed, perform the method, the method comprising: receiving, by the one or more physical processors, a request from a client device for a policy profile; identifying, by the one or more physical processors, multiple policy profiles for the client device; determining, by the one or more physical processors, whether the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with a first hierarchical level; and providing, by the one or more physical processors based on the multiple policy profiles, one or more policy profiles associated with a second hierarchical level to the client device based on a determination that the multiple policy profiles do not include a policy profile associated with the first hierarchical level.
 18. The method of claim 16, wherein the first hierarchical level is closer to a level corresponding to the client device than the second hierarchical level.
 19. The method of claim 16, wherein the first hierarchical level corresponds to a first container, and wherein the second hierarchical level corresponds to a second container that comprises the first container.
 20. The method of claim 16, wherein the first hierarchical level corresponds to the client device, and wherein the second hierarchical level corresponds to a group to which the client device belongs.
 21. The method of claim 16, wherein the first hierarchical level corresponds to a group to which the client device belongs, and wherein the second hierarchical level corresponds to a container that comprises the group.
 22. The method of claim 16, wherein the first hierarchical level corresponds to the client device, and wherein the second hierarchical level corresponds to a container that comprises the client device.
 23. The method of claim 16, further comprising: determining, by the one or more physical processors, whether the client device satisfies one or more system requirements of the one or more policy profiles, wherein providing the one or more policy profiles comprises providing the one or more policy profiles to the client device based on a determination that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements.
 24. The method of claim 23, further comprising: transmitting, by the one or more physical processors to the client device, a request to verify that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements; and receiving, by the one or more physical processors from the client device, a response specifying that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements, wherein the determination that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements is based on the receipt of the response.
 25. The method of claim 16, further comprising: determining, by the one or more physical processors, whether a local cache includes a valid policy profile for the client device, wherein identifying the multiple policy profiles comprises identifying policy profiles for the client device in a data store in response to a determination that the local cache does not include a valid policy profile for the client device.
 26. The method of claim 25, further comprising: determining, by the one or more physical processors, whether policy profiles stored on the local cache include a policy profile with an age satisfying an age threshold, wherein the determination that the local cache does not include a valid policy profile for the client device is based on the determination that the stored policy profiles do not include a policy profile with an age satisfying the age threshold.
 27. The method of claim 16, wherein providing the one or more policy profiles comprises providing the one or more policy profiles to the client device without providing a policy profile of the multiple policy profiles that is associated with a third hierarchical level based on a determination that the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with the second hierarchical level.
 28. A system for providing policy profiles to client devices based on hierarchical levels, the system comprising: one or more physical processors programmed to execute one or more computer program instructions which, when executed, cause the one or more physical processors to: receive a request from a client device for a policy profile; identify multiple policy profiles for the client device; determine whether the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with a first hierarchical level; and provide, based on the multiple policy profiles, one or more policy profiles associated with a second hierarchical level to the client device based on a determination that the multiple policy profiles do not include a policy profile associated with the first hierarchical level.
 29. The system of claim 28, wherein the first hierarchical level is closer to a level corresponding to the client device than the second hierarchical level.
 30. The system of claim 28, wherein the one or more physical processors are further caused to: determine whether the client device satisfies one or more system requirements of the one or more policy profiles, wherein providing the one or more policy profiles comprises providing the one or more policy profiles to the client device based on a determination that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements.
 31. The system of claim 30, wherein the one or more physical processors are further caused to: transmit, to the client device, a request to verify that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements; and receive, from the client device, a response specifying that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements, wherein the determination that the client device satisfies the one or more system requirements is based on the receipt of the response.
 32. The system of claim 28, wherein the one or more physical processors are further caused to: determine whether a local cache includes a valid policy profile for the client device, wherein identifying the multiple policy profiles comprises identifying policy profiles for the client device in a data store in response to a determination that the local cache does not include a valid policy profile for the client device.
 33. The system of claim 32, wherein the one or more physical processors are further caused to: determine whether policy profiles stored on the local cache include a policy profile with an age satisfying an age threshold, wherein the determination that the local cache does not include a valid policy profile for the client device is based on the determination that the stored policy profiles do not include a policy profile with an age satisfying the age threshold.
 34. The system of claim 28, wherein providing the one or more policy profiles comprises providing the one or more policy profiles to the client device without providing a policy profile of the multiple policy profiles that is associated with a third hierarchical level based on a determination that the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with the second hierarchical level.
 35. A computer-implemented method of providing policy profiles to client devices based on hierarchical levels, the method being implemented by a computer system that comprises one or more physical processors executing one or more computer program instructions which, when executed, perform the method, the method comprising: receiving, by the one or more physical processors, a request from a client device for a policy profile; identifying, by the one or more physical processors, multiple policy profiles for the client device; determining, by the one or more physical processors, whether the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with a first hierarchical level; and providing, by the one or more physical processors based on the multiple policy profiles, one or more policy profiles associated with the first hierarchical level to the client device without providing a policy profile of the multiple policy profiles that is associated with a second hierarchical level based on a determination that the multiple policy profiles include a policy profile associated with the first hierarchical level.
 36. The method of claim 35, wherein the first hierarchical level is closer to a level corresponding to the client device than the second hierarchical level. 